KUCR History with Photos.Docx

KUCR History with Photos.Docx

The following are the recollections of my time at KUCR radio, beginning in August of 1966 through graduation in June of 1970. I shall attempt to give a sense of the station and the role it played in the staff's lives as well as for our campus & non-college listening audience. From its humble on-air founding early in October 1966 through June 1970, KUCR exploded to become a 24/7 operation that was the largest staffed radio station (commercial or otherwise) on the West Coast.............and a nationally recognized leader in collegiate news. ​ ​ ​Bob Stubenrauch 1966-1967 "HEY KID.............YOU WANT TO GET YOUR FCC 3rd CLASS BROADCAST LICENSE AND BECOME A DISK JOCKEY WITH YOUR OWN RADIO SHOW?" Thus began my introduction to the station. I was a new freshman, and had arrived in late August of 1966 - before we were technically supposed to be moving into our dorm rooms. The Bacchus Hall R.A. happened to be there, and mercifully told me to go ahead & pick a room & move in. I picked the very last room near the rear exit, figuring it would make ingress and egress more easy for any female guests & contraband items. The next day I wandered out into the rear parking lot and noticed a lot of people & activity going on across adjacent Linden street in one of the married student duplexes, so I walked over. Hans Wynholds, Bill Farmer, Bob Clevenger, and Bill Elledge were there, moving in furniture & record racks, as well as crawling over and under the old Sparta mix board that a commercial radio station had donated. After hanging around for the afternoon and helping a little, Hans turned to me and offered a DJ slot, which I immediately accepted. Throughout the coming term of September 1966 to June of 1967 I found a happy place of freshman-year belonging there at the station - made all the easier by the fact that I could walk out my dorm room & be there in 15 seconds. It was a happening place to be, with a lot of enthusiasm and energy. My dorm hall also proved to be an abundant staff source for KUCR, totaling nearly 25% of the on-air personnel for that first year! The aforementioned leaders' influence in bringing the station to life cannot be overstated. I think that had it been the 1968-1970 era staff that had wanted to create a campus station it might not have received approval from Chancellor Ivan Hinderaker due to our generally more radical political & cultural views. Hans, Bill, Bob, and Bill were able to bring not only the technical expertise but also the social and The aforementioned leaders' influence in bringing the station to life cannot be overstated. I think that had it been the 1968-1970 era staff that had wanted to create a campus station it might not have received approval from Chancellor Ivan Hinderaker due to our generally more radical political & cultural views. Hans, Bill, Bob, and Bill were able to bring not only the technical expertise but also the social and cultural outlook that was able to receive a green-light of approval & trust from the chancellor & the board of directors at UC Riverside. They were trustworthy, hard-working guys. Our fledgling little UC campus had only 4,000 students in 1966. Our city, Riverside, was not what you would call a cutting-edge hub of social opportunity for young people like it was at Los Angeles, or San Diego, or Santa Barbara, or Berkeley. We didn't even have smog yet. But we had a bell tower!!!!!!!! KUCR was there to do a live remote broadcast of its dedication, and I observed that interest in our remote table broadcast set-up nearly rivaled the interest in the bell tower itself. I think that having its own campus radio station helped the college to feel better about itself, like somehow it had kind of more "arrived." KUCR's active presence around the campus was an asset & an enhancement to our feelings about being at UCR. The founders of the station did a marvelous job in that respect. As far as news, Bill Elledge had immediately begun lusting after a UPI or AP news ticker teletype machine. Unfortunately, that dream did not come to pass that first year because of the monthly subscription cost. Our news, both campus, local, & national, was cobbled together through in-person interviews, newspapers, other radio stations, and a little television. It was tough to generate a feeling for a hard-hitting daily radio news report under such circumstances, but Bill did his best. He even made a copy on an endless-loop eight-track cassette of a news teletype machine which was always played in the background each time he did the news. It sounded cool to all of us. There he would be with his scripts, sitting at a table in the broadcast room in front of a table mic, peering over his glasses, looking through the soundproof window at the person running the mix board.......everyone waving their hands, holding up written messages, gesturing wildly, running back & forth, and trying our best to sound professional & make everything come off smoothly. Given our lack of experience and supporting equipment, I think we did pretty well. Little did we know that a year and a half later we would be live on the air from the lobby of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, participating in a newly-formed UC campus radio news network broadcast, and were probably first in the nation to announce the shooting of Bobby Kennedy as he walked through the kitchen - about 200 feet away from the remote set-up - live as it occurred. That first year, KUCR played a good amount of jazz, classical, folk, and commercial pop music, plus a beginning amount of what might be called "alternative FM" rock. In retrospect, popular radio music programming itself was on the cusp at that time between two generational eras....................with a great transition already looming. FM Underground radio was just getting going on the East & West coasts. The Beatles had given their last public pop concert at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, and now retired to the studio to experiment with new sounds, styles, and lyrics. The San Francisco & Los Angeles music scenes were awash with newly forming groups that had names like Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Doors, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Mothers of Invention, Velvet Underground, etc. The music industry itself was undergoing a transition as well. All of these new groups that began to appear wrote & owned their own music (as differentiated from the Tin Pan Alley style songwriters who worked directly for the big record companies). For years, the big labels had the songs that they owned, written by their employees, and performed by hired singers & groups (ie: Righteous Brothers, Supremes, Bobby Vinton, etc) who had no ownership interest or control in the songs that they were making famous. Hence the record companies pretty much determined what was recorded & what was played. A tectonic shift was in the works regarding the music business. Having come from the San Francisco Bay Area in high-school, I was somewhat familiar with the S. F. underground scene and had started to attend concerts at Fillmore, Avalon, etc. My musical emphasis at KUCR was to be on those groups. I called my show "San Francisco Sounds," but also included anything from LA, England, and New York. During Easter Break of 1967 when I was up in Palo Alto, I learned that the Grateful Dead were having a release party in San Francisco for their first album. Not being shy, a couple of us showed up at the door with our "real radio" KUCR staff cards, and were admitted to the festivities as part of the media! Many members of the S.F. bands were there, and some good connections were made. I was especially sure to talk with the various band managers about our radio station, and got ourselves on their distribution lists for whenever singles or new albums were coming out. I cannot express how much I enjoyed being a part of KUCR. I became a pretty constant person there for three reasons: (a) I had already decided that life was too short to study much; (b) I lived 15 seconds away ourselves on their distribution lists for whenever singles or new albums were coming out. I cannot express how much I enjoyed being a part of KUCR. I became a pretty constant person there for three reasons: (a) I had already decided that life was too short to study much; (b) I lived 15 seconds away from the station; (c) I was just a cruddy & unconfident freshman who couldn't get anywhere with the girls. So with time to spare, I threw myself into radio and began to become a member of the inner circle of workers. Hans Wynholds & Bill Farmer were seniors that first year of the station being on the air, so they were about to move on. Bob Clevenger was a junior, and was slotted to take over duties as station manager for 1967 to 1968. Bill loved news, classical music, and engineering. Ric Fazekas (the artist formerly known as Rich Fazekas) took over as Music Director. I was picked to become KUCR's first ever Personnel Director, whatever that meant. I was soon to learn what that meant. 1967-1968 I had gone back home to Palo Alto for the summer, and returned to my same dorm room on Bacchus Hall as a sophomore for the 67-68 year..........and as Personnel Director of KUCR.

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